2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.progress.2014.10.002
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Housebuilding, demographic change and affordability as outcomes of local planning decisions: Exploring interactions using a sub-regional model of housing markets in England

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2
1

Citation Types

0
12
0
1

Year Published

2016
2016
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
6
3

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 23 publications
(13 citation statements)
references
References 73 publications
0
12
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Accordingly, housing prices and affordability are also substantially influenced by regulatory practices (Bramley & Watkins, ; Huang & Tang, ; Ihlanfeldt, ; Jansen & Mills, ; Katz & Rosen, ; Pollakowski & Wachter, ).…”
Section: Land‐use Regulation and The Housing Marketmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Accordingly, housing prices and affordability are also substantially influenced by regulatory practices (Bramley & Watkins, ; Huang & Tang, ; Ihlanfeldt, ; Jansen & Mills, ; Katz & Rosen, ; Pollakowski & Wachter, ).…”
Section: Land‐use Regulation and The Housing Marketmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequently, one of the most prominent observations in the housing market literature is that housing supply elasticity is highly affected by land-use and construction regulations (Ball, Meen, & Nygaard, 2010;Barker, 2008;Glaeser, Gyourko, & Saks, 2005;Glaeser & Ward, 2009;Mayo & Sheppard, 2001;Paciorek, 2013;Quigley & Raphael, 2005). Accordingly, housing prices and affordability are also substantially influenced by regulatory practices (Bramley & Watkins, 2016;Huang & Tang, 2012;Ihlanfeldt, 2007;Jansen & Mills, 2013;Katz & Rosen, 1987;Pollakowski & Wachter, 1990).…”
Section: Land-use Regulation and The Housing Marketmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although economic crises are unavoidable, the opinion here is that rational decision making in real estate development makes it possible to diminish the losses. Many models and methods for the analysis of real estate development and their components have been developed worldwide: -Linear models of the real estate development process (Medalen, 2004;Miles, 2007;Røsnes & Kristoffersen, 2009); -Iterative real estate project models (Olsson, Sørensen, & Leikvam, 2015); -Seven stages real estate development process model (Kohlhepp, 2012); -New Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model on China's housing market fluctuations (Wen & He, 2015); -A sub-regional model of housing markets in England (Bramley & Watkins, 2016); -The recreational complex real estate sustainability assessment model allowing assessment of the aspects of sustainable construction (environmental, economic and social) (Raslanas et al, 2016); -Typology-based approach model for estimation of the energy performance certificate of a housing stock characterized via qualitative variables (Florio & Teissier, 2015); -Mixed-methods evaluation of a short-term housing support program for homeless families (Meschede & Chaganti, 2015); -Method and model for early-warning and forecasting of real estate development (Huang et al, 2015); -Model for optimization of construction contracting in housing development project (Ngowtanasuwan, 2013); -Model of conflict resolution (Wang, Kilgour, & Hipel, 2015); -Risk evaluation model for real estate projects (Sun, Huang, Chen, & Li, 2008); -Analogical regression method (a real estate appraisal system) (Kettani & Oral, 2015); -Mixed-method approach (downtown redevelopment) (Charney, 2015); -Normative process model (managing iterations in the modular real estate development process) (Eppinger, Bonelli, & Gonzalez, 2013); -Model of park development (BenDor, Westervelt, Song, & Sexton, 2013); -Hedonic model for high-speed rail station on spatial variations in housing price (Geng, Bao, & Liang, 2015); -Public-private partnership models (Cruz & Marques, 2011;Wang, 2015); -Micro-simulation model of hou...…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lefebvre's classification of space into three elements, as conceived, perceived and lived, enables distinctions to be made between the exchange values or use value of housing development (McCann 1999). The development of market housing is motivated by exchange values, where the price of land determines scheme viability and subsequent affordability -or lack of it (Ball 2003;Bramley & Watkins 2016), and neighbourhood opposition to housing growth has been similarly related to socio-economic status and house values (Taylor 2013;Taylor et al 2016). But neighbourhoods appear additionally motivated by use values and the potential for land to meet local need and contribute intangibly to place identity and sense of belonging.…”
Section: Housing Growth and Localismmentioning
confidence: 99%